1972’s Best Rock Albums

Our list of 1972's Best Rock Albums illustrates just how fickle fates often are. Some bands were in ascension, while others found themselves at the end of stirring runs. Some were experiencing career pinnacles, even as others completely fell apart. Yet, over the course of a strikingly diverse 12-month period, each somehow hit upon just the right mixture of creativity, gumption and timing.

For others, 1972 brought subtler, though no less significant, changes. Pink Floyd continued their transitional journey toward The Dark Side of the Moon, and Ted Templeman began work with both Little Feat and Captain Beefheart (no kidding). Chicago finally issued a single-disc release – on their fifth try – while Funkadelic opted to put out a double album for the first time.